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Electronic Burglary in the Senate

earthworm2 writes "The Boston Globe is reporting that Republicans on the Senate judiciary committee have spied on confidential Democratic files for a year, studying their strategies and passing on the juicy bits to the media."

11 of 1,391 comments (clear)

  1. Dodgeball by CGP314 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Republicans on the Senate judiciary committee have spied on confidential Democratic files for a year

    Why bother? They are all on the rich kids' team anyway.


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  2. Bias? by isa-kuruption · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Well, this bug would seem to affect all members on the shared computer system, yet the Boston Globe only biasly charges Republicans with computer fraud?

    If this bug was known, as the story would suggest, wouldn't Democrats have done the same... or is the "Party of Lawyers", as Newt Gingrish would say, suddenly obedient, quiet choir boys? I think not!

    Or, maybe the Republicans were smart enough to NOT put their documents on this machine knowing it was mismanaged.

    Or, now that I've put on my tinfoil hat, the Democrats purposely hired an incompetent administration who purposely put the "hole" in the system so the Democrats could read Republican documents... but the Republicans spotted it and stopped using the system while the Democrats didn't.

    Or, maybe this is just being blown all out of proportion because the Boston Globe is known for it's liberal bias and would do anything, even risk their journalistic integrity (not that it means anything nowadays), to remove the Republicans from the White House in favor of it's homeboy John Kerry (the would-be irishman).

  3. RE: Imagine the uproar if the Dems got caught... by Crusty+Oldman · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Imagine the uproar if the Dems got caught doing something like this...

    They have. Spying on cell phone calls. Not much happened, other than the media making a story of the contents of the conversations.

    You and I would be in trouble just for tuning in those frequencies, but the Dems and the media just had a big laugh about what a fun little caper it was.

  4. Re:CyberGate by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Funny you should quote the dying words of Kurtz from _Apocalypse Now_ and _Heart of Darkness_. Kurtz would have been a brilliant Republican, running his cult of personality like a spear through the hearts of all who opposed him in his pursuit of power. People are wrong when they like people who feed on them like vampires, while offering only the chance to become vampires, too. If you still like these Republican crooks after they destroy any vestige of trust, judicial responsibility, fair play, morals, any of the other things you're electing them for, then you're a fool. A total zero.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  5. Ahhh, the reputable Boston Globe by DesScorp · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Yeah, let's hold the Globe up as great moral journalism with unbiased credibility. The Globe, aka The Kerry Herald, is the same paper that never met a Republican they liked, thinks Yassar Arafat is a swell guy, and equates the state of Israel with racism and evil.

    Just because they're old doesn't make them a good newspaper. The New York Post was founded by Alexander Hamilton, is one of the oldest papers in the U.S., and now is nothing but a tabloid.

    And it seems that the only entities that give a rats ass about this are:
    A- The Boston Herald
    B- Democratic Senators
    C- Slashdot readers

    Unless you buy into the theory that EVERY OTHER MEDIA OUTLET is controlled by The Man, could it be that, oh, the public just doesn't give a shit?

    --
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  6. Re: Imagine the uproar if the Dems got caught... by Crusty+Oldman · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Oh fooey! The cell call was intercepted in D.C. not Florida. Ever try to get the cell tower just a quarter mile away? And you don't just stumble across the cell phone band on your Sony. In fact you can't legally buy a reciever that tunes the 850 Mhz band in the U.S.

    But you fail to address the issue. Here we have the Dems making hay by publicizing a private conversation. What happened? Nothing. That answers the previous poster's question.

    And finally, who ever modded my previous reply a 0 flamebait is obviously a Dem, misusing the system.

  7. Re:Novak again? by scrod · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    So, Novak leaks the name of a CIA operator for political gain to hide the fact that Bush lied about Iraq trying to buy uranium for nuclear weapons. Then he blows the cover of a CIA front operation to further his story.

    Yeah that's right, Novak leaked the information to himself and then published it. No, Karl Rove leaked the name of a CIA operative to Novak, and Novak publishes the information. Certainly Novak is at fault for perpetuating the Bush admin's blatant attempts at base political gain, but it's a certain member in the Bush administration who committed a federal felony.
  8. Re:well then by ahdeoz · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    you are a murderer in every way except courage.

  9. As long as we're playing neener neener ... by benedict · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I might as well bring up Iran/Contra.

    Genuine treason makes all of this pale in
    comparison. And the perpetrators are still
    in power.

    --
    Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
  10. Re:The goods by wayward_son · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    "Bush lied about WMD"

    Really?

    Bill and Hillary Clinton thought Iraq had WMD.
    Al Gore thought Iraq had WMD.
    Ted Kennedy thought Iraq had WMD.
    John Kerry thought Iraq had WMD.
    Plenty of other Democrats thought Iraq had WMD.
    Even the French thought Iraq had WMD.

    It turns out that Iraq probably didn't have WMD.

    There is a difference between a mistake and a lie. If the best intelligence availble told Bush that Iraq had WMD and he repeated that, then it is a mistake, not a lie. Clinton and others who had access to the same intellegence came to the same conclusion. It would only be a lie if intelligence told him Iraq had no WMD, but he said it anyway.

    I think Bush owes the American people an apology and some heads need to roll at the CIA, but Bush did not LIE about WMD. Given the information that he had, I would have probably done the same thing if I were in his shoes.

  11. Who Rules America? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Who Rules America?
    The Alien Grip on Our News and Entertainment Media Must Be Broken

    By the Research Staff of National Vanguard Books
    P.O. Box 330 Hillsboro West Virginia 24946 USA

    There is no greater power in the world today than that wielded by the manipulators of public opinion in America. No king or pope of old, no conquering general or high priest ever disposed of a power even remotely approaching that of the few dozen men who control America's mass media of news and entertainment.

    Their power is not distant and impersonal; it reaches into every home in America, and it works its will during nearly every waking hour. It is the power that shapes and molds the mind of virtually every citizen, young or old, rich or poor, simple or sophisticated.

    The mass media form for us our image of the world and then tell us what to think about that image. Essentially everything we know -- or think we know -- about events outside our own neighborhood or circle of acquaintances comes to us via our daily newspaper, our weekly news magazine, our radio, or our television.

    It is not just the heavy-handed suppression of certain news stories from our newspapers or the blatant propagandizing of history-distorting TV "docudramas" that characterizes the opinion-manipulating techniques of the media masters. They exercise both subtlety and thoroughness in their management of the news and the entertainment that they present to us.

    For example, the way in which the news is covered: which items are emphasized and which are played down; the reporter's choice of words, tone of voice, and facial expressions; the wording of headlines; the choice of illustrations -- all of these things subliminally and yet profoundly affect the way in which we interpret what we see or hear.

    On top of this, of course, the columnists and editors remove any remaining doubt from our minds as to just what we are to think about it all. Employing carefully developed psychological techniques, they guide our thought and opinion so that we can be in tune with the "in" crowd, the "beautiful people," the "smart money." They let us know exactly what our attitudes should be toward various types of people and behavior by placing those people or that behavior in the context of a TV drama or situation comedy and having the other TV characters react in the Politically Correct way.

    Molding American Minds

    For example, a racially mixed couple will be respected, liked, and socially sought after by other characters, as will a "take charge" Black scholar or businessman, or a sensitive and talented homosexual, or a poor but honest and hardworking illegal alien from Mexico. On the other hand, a White racist -- that is, any racially conscious White person who looks askance at miscegenation or at the rapidly darkening racial situation in America -- is portrayed, at best, as a despicable bigot who is reviled by the other characters, or, at worst, as a dangerous psychopath who is fascinated by firearms and is a menace to all law-abiding citizens. The White racist "gun nut," in fact, has become a familiar stereotype on TV shows.

    The average American, of whose daily life TV-watching takes such an unhealthy portion, distinguishes between these fictional situations and reality only with difficulty, if at all. He responds to the televised actions, statements, and attitudes of TV actors much as he does to his own peers in real life. For all too many Americans the real world has been replaced by the false reality of the TV environment, and it is to this false reality that his urge to conform responds. Thus, when a TV scriptwriter expresses approval of some ideas and actions through the TV characters for whom he is writing, and disapproval of others, he exerts a powerful pressure on millions of viewers toward conformity with his own views.

    And as it is with TV entertainment, so it is also with the news, whether televised or printed. The insidious thing about this form of thought control is that even when we rea